Now let's delve into election fraud. An issue that's talked about, and so I thought well, it'd be pretty interesting just to see what does the public think is really going on? I mean, that's quite different, we don't know really whether there's fraud and how much. A lot of studies show not much, but everybody on one side says that people are voting who shouldn't be allowed to vote. The other side, people say that voters are being suppressed. So, what does the American public think?
Do you think there's significant or insignificant electoral fraud in the United States? 60, 40 significant. Okay, who's to blame? Democrats, 27. Republicans, 30. Both equally, 44. So this is not seen as a Democratic issue, or a Republican issue except by those of us who are most partisan. It's primarily seen as a nonpartisan issue in which everyone has to be on guard and possibly to blame.
Do you think that significant or insignificant numbers of people not eligible to vote are voting anyway? 48% agreed with that. Do you think that significant or insignificant numbers of people who are eligible to vote are being turned away and prevented from voting? 46% agreed with that. Again, these answers are probably partisan mirrors of each other, but at least it was not a majority that believed both. And so, you see that the public sees significant fraud. Partisans of one side blame the other, but that no one really gets more blame than the other out of this. So, is there significant fraud? I couldn't tell you. Is there a lot of finger pointing? That's pretty much what this poll shows. Almost equal finger pointing from each side of the aisle against the other aisle.